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Water news you need to know

A collection of top water news from around California and the West compiled each weekday. Send any comments or article submissions to Foundation News & Publications Director Chris Bowman.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Despite California groundwater law, challenges remain

In 2014, Gov. Jerry Brown signed historic legislation establishing a framework for California to begin managing groundwater in an effort to curb widespread overpumping, which had sent aquifer levels into rapid decline, left hundreds of wells dry, and caused the ground to sink in parts of the Central Valley. The law was based on the idea that groundwater could best be managed at the local level, and it called for newly formed local agencies to gradually adopt measures to address chronic declines in groundwater levels. The legislation laid out an implementation timeline stretching more than a quarter-century, giving many areas until 2040 to address their depletion problems. Today, experts and state officials say implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, or SGMA, is unfolding largely as expected. But while California has made some preliminary progress toward safeguarding groundwater, the hardest tests loom ahead.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

California extreme weather shift: from record heat to cold, rain, even snow

After a prolonged stretch of record-breaking heat that scorched Southern California and sparked wildfires, much of the state will experience below average temperatures, drizzle and even early-season snow this week. The National Weather Service issued its earliest snow advisory in the past 20 years over the weekend for portions of the Sierra Nevada. In Southern California, where three fires have scorched more than 115,000 acres and burned out of control for days, the rapid cooldown and higher humidity levels have already provided some relief for firefighters trying to get a handle on the blazes.

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Aquafornia news The Mercury News

Bay Area flood control project first authorized 70 years ago finally to be finished

Nearly every soaking wet winter, Llagas Creek around Morgan Hill has flooded. Its rising, muddy waters poured over the banks in 2017 and in 2009, and many times before that over generations, damaging downtown businesses, homes and farm fields. The federal government authorized a flood control project to fix it in 1954, when Dwight Eisenhower was president. Now finally, construction to bring the area up to modern flood standards is nearing the final stages. Officials at the Santa Clara Valley Water District, a government agency based in San Jose, are embarking on the third and final phase this month of a $241 million project to improve flood protection along 13 miles of Llagas Creek. The project recently received $80 million in federal funding, enough to finish the work.

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Aquafornia news SJV Water

More lawyers: New legal team joins fight for the Kern River

A prestigious, international law firm has joined the legal team representing local groups suing the City of Bakersfield over how it operates the Kern River. Morrison Foerster is well-known in environmental advocacy circles for, among other things, its work on the Mono Lake case that resulted in the “National Audubon Society v. Superior Court” decision. That ruling restricted how much water the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power could divert from streams flowing into Mono Lake based on the Public Trust doctrine, which holds that the state owns all natural resources and must put them to the highest public use, including the environment and public access. The lawsuit against Bakersfield asserts that the city must study its Kern River operations through the Public Trust lens, and not just based on the more than 100 years of court decrees and agreements amongst rights holders on the river.

Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Can agave help solve California’s agricultural dilemma? Some farmers are betting big

California’s fertile farmland — much of it in the San Joaquin Valley — feeds the nation. But all that farming takes a lot of water, which continues to dwindle as the state faces the harsh realities of climate change. With less water to go around and hotter conditions threatening many legacy crops, farmers are fallowing more acres and losing hundreds of millions in revenue. In a study from UC Merced, researchers estimated the state lost 752,000 acres of irrigated farmland in 2022. Switching to less-thirsty crops could cut agricultural water consumption in the state by as much as 93%, researchers with UC Santa Barbara and the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory reported earlier this year. Now some farmers are betting big on what they believe could be part of the solution: agave.

Aquafornia news The Colorado Sun

How to help farmers survive drought, pests, more: Start with the soil

In southwestern Colorado, Greg Vlaming crouched down to look at dying remains of an oat crop baking under the July sun. It wasn’t just a dead plant — it was armor, he said.  “This minimizes wind erosion and surface runoff,” said Vlaming, a soil scientist, consultant and farmer. “Water can’t run off on something that’s like this.” Vlaming is working alongside the state, researchers, farmers and ranchers on a newly expanded soil health program established by the Colorado legislature in 2021. The goal of the program is to nurture soils in order to reap rewards — like more efficient irrigation, more carbon storage and healthier crops.  But changing long-standing growing practices can be a risky, expensive challenge for farmers already dealing with drought and thin margins.

Aquafornia news 12 News (Phoenix, Arizona)

Mesa begins removing turf across city to help save water

Monday marked the beginning of crews in Mesa starting to remove grass from dozens of parks and retention basins in an effort to conserve water. The City of Mesa is removing about five acres of turf throughout 54 parks and retention basins that are “non-functional,” meaning it may be close to walls where people aren’t using the turf for recreation. The city estimates it’ll save more than 5 million gallons of Colorado River water a year. To get an idea of what that’d look like, it’s about 15 football fields covered in a foot of water. 

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Aquafornia news Border Report

Researchers back in Tijuana River Valley, still finding hydrogen sulfide in the air

Researchers from San Diego State University and UC San Diego are back in the Tijuana River Valley after pulling out last week over health concerns arising from toxic gases they detected in the air. Last week, they announced a temporary halt to their work when their monitors detected hydrogen sulfide and hydrogen cyanide in the air. Citing health concerns, researchers felt it was in their best interests to leave the area until further testing could be done. Almost immediately, the County of San Diego disagreed with the researchers and quickly released its own data gathered by its own monitors.

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Aquafornia news KESQ (Palm Desert, California)

Coachella Valley Water District agrees to nearly $237K penalty for sewage spill

The Coachella Valley Water District will pay a penalty of nearly $237,000 for its role in a 2020 sewage spill that discharged 128,000 gallons of raw wastewater into a Riverside County stormwater channel. The penalty was announced by the State Water Control Board on Monday. According to the agency, an investigation by the Colorado River Basin Regional Water Quality Control Board found that one of CVWD’s collection systems—Water Reclamation Plant No. 10—failed due to a power outage on Sept. 22, 2020. This caused it to release untreated wastewater from a manhole for about an hour.

Related stormwater article:

Aquafornia news High Country News

The California Forever debate moves underground

… California Forever is determined to try the ballot again in 2026. … At the heart of the debate lies the company’s most compelling argument: its promise to bring more housing to the Bay Area, where developers face significant regulatory hurdles. It’s an offer that taps into a genuine regional need, even as it also poses new problems at the local level. Solano residents, like many Westerners, have reason to be suspicious of wealthy but distant developers who are disconnected from local needs, said Kristina Hill, research director of the Institute of Urban and Regional Development at the University of California, Berkeley. She noted that some locals might be attracted by California Forever’s technological optimism, with its visionary talk of new designs for dense multifamily housing. At the same time, however, the company’s plans could impact the local environment and quality of life; the land it owns includes valuable natural resources, such as vernal pools, the headwaters of streams and fertile soil for grazing or agriculture, which provide other tangible benefits for the community. 

Aquafornia news 10News San Diego

Lack of oxygen threatens fish in San Elijo Lagoon

… Jennifer Bright is the Chief Philanthropy Director and the COO of the Nature Collective. The non-profit has been caring for the lagoon for nearly four decades. “The lagoon has been closed since the beginning of July, and with that, you don’t have an influx of water, so the water that is in there isn’t sustaining itself, and it’s not getting fresh water in from the Pacific Ocean nor does it have the ability to take any runoff that is coming from upstream out and that creates a scenario where we have reduced oxygen levels for the lagoon,” said Bright. … “Every year, we go out and open the inlet. This year we had to open it twice, and we were finding the rate of sand accumulation was higher than it ever has been in the past, and we were unable to keep up with that,” said Bright. The recent heat wave also contributed to the lagoon system becoming hypoxic, which killed fish and other marine life.

Aquafornia news The Washington Post

Opinion: Urban wildfires are leaving behind toxic metals in streams

… As sunlight filters through the water, mayfly nymphs, no larger than your fingernail, cling to algae-coated cobbles. … This scene is common in well-maintained creeks and streams that flow through populated areas. But when wildfires sweep through, the toxic materials left behind can devastate this ecosystem. … Urban conflagrations consume a mix of synthetic and natural materials, including homes, vehicles, electronics and household chemicals. This creates a unique set of problems that can have far-reaching consequences for waterways and the creatures that call them home. As an environmental engineer, I study how human actions on land affect the chemistry and ecology of surface water systems, including an important group of stream dwellers: benthic macroinvertebrates. These tiny creatures, which include mayflies, stoneflies and caddisflies, are not only food sources for fish and other stream life but also serve as nature’s own water quality monitors.
—Written by Lauren Magliozzi, researcher in environmental engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder

Aquafornia news The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa)

Editorial: California makes progress toward land conservation goals

… If California can sustain its early progress, there’s good reason for optimism that the 30×30 goal is attainable. Just in the past year, California added about 861,000 acres of grasslands, deserts, freshwater areas and other habitats. It added 631,000 acres the year before. The biggest gains came through enhanced protections for about 120,000 acres of federal lands in the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument. Almost 40,000 acres were also added through the state’s first-ever ancestral land return, funded through a $100 million grant to return land to Indigenous communities, including acreage belonging to the Hoopa Valley Tribe in the Klamath River watershed. Additional efforts are underway to add lands in Coachella Valley and near Joshua Tree National Park.

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Aquafornia news SJV Water

Monday Top of the Scroll: Kings County judge rules against State Water Board in high-stakes groundwater case

The state Water Resources Control Board exceeded its authority, operated under a web of “underground regulations” and made unlawful demands of Kings County water managers, according to a preliminary injunction that is a near total repudiation of state actions in its attempt to reign in excessive groundwater pumping. … Probation would have meant farmers pumping 500 acre feet or more a year would have had to meter and register their wells at $300 each, report extractions and pay $20 per acre foot pumped. That is on top of what farmers already pay their water districts and groundwater sustainability agencies. If deficiencies noted in the region’s groundwater plan couldn’t be fixed to the Water Board’s satisfaction within a year, the state would establish its own pumping limits. … Those requirements are now all paused under the injunction until the trial is concluded. The next hearing is set for Jan. 10, 2025.

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Aquafornia news CNN

California’s earliest snow advisory in nearly 20 years could also bring month’s worth of rain

A low pressure system moving into the West Coast today will bring rare early-season snow and rain to California through Monday. “A winter weather advisory is in effect for portions of the Sierra Nevada above 8,000 feet where up to 4 inches of snow could fall tonight and Monday,” the National Weather Service office in Hanford said. Visitors to Yosemite National Park may encounter snow as they drive through the park. Up to 2 inches of snow is possible from Tuolumne Meadows and Tioga Pass, one of the main thoroughfares in the park.

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Aquafornia news Los Angeles Times

Endangered frogs threatened by California wildfires

Endangered frogs snatched as tadpoles from fire-ravaged mountains above Los Angeles in 2020 were returned home last year in a moment of hope and excitement. But the California amphibians are once again in the line of fire and another rescue mission could be in the cards. Massive wildfires are raging through the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountains — two of the three ranges where Southern California mountain yellow-legged frogs eke out a fragile existence in a handful of isolated streams. As of Saturday, the fires had chewed through more than 90,000 acres and there is worry the flames may be encroaching on the frog’s critical habitat. The federally endangered frogs are “a high priority because these fires are in the only known locations” for the species, said Hans Sin, a biologist for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife’s South Coast region. The San Jacinto Mountains, in Riverside County, are their only other hopping grounds.

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Aquafornia news E&E News by POLITICO

Trump promises California ‘more water than you ever saw’

Former President Donald Trump promised Californians unprecedented access to water and reduced protections for a key fish species if he is reelected. Speaking at a press conference at the golf club he owns near Los Angeles, Trump said farmers in the Golden State have as much as 1,000 acres of “barren and dead and dark” land for every acre of usable land, while houses in wealthy areas get small amounts of water to use. He blamed it on protections for the delta smelt, a small endangered fish species that lives in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta, and said Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) blocked efforts during his previous time in the White House to ease the smelt’s protections.

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Aquafornia news San Francisco Chronicle

San Francisco is trying to restore the river it drinks from

Beneath the warm sun of the San Joaquin Valley, crews with heavy machinery have spent the past two months moving heaps of gravel into the cool waters of the Tuolumne River. The work, in rural Stanislaus County, marks an unlikely partnership between the city of San Francisco and two large irrigation districts to try to revive the river’s struggling salmon population. The gravel bars and riffles being fashioned in the lower reaches of the waterway are expected to help the renowned fish spawn. San Francisco and the Turlock and Modesto irrigation districts have long relied on the Tuolumne for water supplies, and they’ve often fought over who gets what. But now the three parties are working in tandem to save the fish that are close to being wiped out in large part because of the water draws.

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Aquafornia news Courthouse News Service

Residents urge injunction amid claims of racially motivated water restrictions

A federal judge is weighing whether to impose a preliminary injunction on a Northern California county facing a class action on claims it restricts water access for Asian Americans. Four Siskiyou County residents claim that a county ordinance is discriminatory against Asian Americans, who in some cases are forced to use bottled water. White residents don’t face the same discrimination. In one case, someone provided up to 4,000 gallons of water to another with no county intervention, said attorney John Do, who represents the plaintiffs, at a Friday hearing.

Aquafornia news Arizona Republic

Attorney general demands Arizona water director act on Saudi company’s well

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes is demanding that state water officials revoke a deep water well drilling permit issued to a controversial Saudi Arabian company in rural Arizona. The Arizona Department of Water Resources in July authorized Fondomonte to drill a new well for irrigation on the company’s private land in La Paz County, state records show. The company previously gained notoriety for its leasing of several tracts of state land in western Arizona where it had been allowed to pump groundwater unchecked. One of those leases was canceled by the State Land Department and 2023, and three others expired earlier this year. …  Mayes’ missive brought a heated response that evening from the office of Buschatzke’s boss, Gov. Katie Hobbs. A spokesperson called it “empty grandstanding” and said Mayes’ earlier rhetoric had been cited in Fondomonte’s legal appeal of the cancellation of its leases.

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